W. K. LOCKHART ET UX. v. CLYDE GARNER ET AL.
No. A-5679
Supreme Court of Texas
January 23, 1957
Rehearing overruled February 20, 1957
298 S.W. 2d Series 108
Louis W. Graves, Jr., of Houston, for respondents.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
MR. JUSTICE SMITH delivered the opinion of the Court.
The opinions delivered in this cause on October 3, 1956 are withdrawn and the following is substituted therefor.
Petitioners W. K. Lockhart and wife, Mamie Lockhart, filed this suit on April 10, 1954 against respondents, Clyde Garner et al., in the District Court of Cherokee County, Texas, alleg-
A trial to the court without the intervention of a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of petitioners cancelling the deed of May 5, 1928 and the recordation thereof, the net result being to award W. K. Lockhart and wife, Mamie Lockhart, the full fee simple title to the 50 acres of land involved. On appeal the Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and rendered its judgment that petitioners take nothing. 285 S.W. 2d 393.
The respondents are the heirs of J. M. Garner and wife, both deceased, and claim title to the royalty conveyed to their father, J. M. Garner, under the deed dated May 5, 1928. It was stipulated that J. M. Garner and wife were the common source of title so far as this case was concerned. Petitioners deraign title from the common source through the following deeds:
- On May 4, 1928 J. M. Garner and wife conveyed the 50-acre tract of land involved in this suit to Mrs. Frances Davis, a married woman;
- On September 21, 1929 Mrs. Frances Davis, joined by her husband, W. P. Davis, conveyed the same land by general warranty deed to W. K. Lockhart.
Neither of these deeds contained any reservations or exceptions and made no reference whatever to the deed of May 5, 1928. To defeat this title the respondents in their pleadings set up the defense that the deeds of May 4, 1928 and May 5, 1928 were actually executed and delivered the same day and that “such documents were a part and parcel of the same trans-
The respondents further relied upon a plea of ratification and confirmation on the part of W. P. Davis by virtue of the fact that on July 18, 1934 he signed and acknowledged the deed of May 5, 1928.
Petitioners contend that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding that they were strangers to the title of Mrs. Davis, and therefore were not entitled to attack her deed of May 5, 1928 to J. M. Garner on the ground that it was not properly acknowledged. We agree with the petitioner. He derived his title from Mrs. Davis, and, therefore, is in privity with her.
The petitioners contend that the deed executed by Mrs. Davis on May 5, 1928, as grantor, to J. M. Garner was ineffective as a conveyance because the deed was not acknowledged in accordance with the provisions of Articles 6605 and 6608, Vernon‘s Annotated Civil Statutes of the State of Texas. He maintains this position regardless of whether the deed was executed by the wife with or without the consent of her husband.
For the deed to be effective as a conveyance where the wife as the sole grantor of community property executes and acknowledges the deed alone, it must be established by the evidence that such action on the part of the wife was with the consent of the husband. Our conclusion to consider the 50-acre tract as community property is based on the fact that the tract was conveyed to Mrs. Davis during coverture and is presumed to be community property. There being no recital in the deed or evidence to the contrary, the presumption is conclusive that the land involved is community property. There is no evidence that the property involved was a homestead. It is well settled that a deed to nonhomestead community property executed by the wife alone with the consent of the husband conveys title. Thomas v. Chance, 11 Texas 634; Speer‘s Law of Marital Rights in
“The strict rules governing the conveyance of a wife‘s separate property are not applicable to the conveyance of the community property.”
We hold that the requirements of
Our conclusion on the point above discussed renders it unnecessary to pass upon the other points urged by petitioner. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is affirmed.
Opinion delivered, January 23, 1957.
I believe there is evidence in the record which will support the judgment rendered by the judge before whom the case was tried, without intervention of the jury.
Therefore, I dissent from the holding of the majority.
Opinion delivered January 23, 1957.
Rehearing overruled February 20, 1957.
